–How your friends and neighbors want to cure our anemic economy

Mitchell’s laws: Reduced money growth never stimulates economic growth. To survive long term, a monetarily non-sovereign government must have a positive balance of payments. Economic austerity causes civil disorder. Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.
==========================================================================================================================================================================

64% of Americans believe anemia should be cured by a combination of reduced blood transfusions and increased application of leeches. Well, actually it’s 64% of Americans who believe an anemic economy should be cured by reduced federal spending and increased taxes:

Washington Post-ABC News Poll, 10/11/11
This Washington Post-ABC News poll was conducted by telephone September 29-October 2 2011, among a random national sample of 1,002 adults, including landline and cell phone-only respondents.

A committee of (Democrats) and (Republicans) in Congress has until late November to propose ways to cut the federal deficit by one-point-two trillion dollars over the next 10 years. Do you think this should be done by (cutting federal spending), by (increasing taxes), or by a combination of both?

Cutting federal spending . . . 31%
Increasing taxes . . . . . . . . . 3%
Combination . . . . . . . . . . . 64%
No opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2%

No comment.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com


==========================================================================================================================================
No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth. Monetary Sovereignty: The key equation in economics: Federal Deficits – Net Imports = Net Private Savings

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

–Middle- and lower-classes: Guard your wallet. Tea/Republicans at work.

Mitchell’s laws: Reduced money growth never stimulates economic growth. To survive long term, a monetarily non-sovereign government must have a positive balance of payments. Economic austerity causes civil disorder. Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.
==========================================================================================================================================================================

Here are some excerpts from a truly excellent article in TPM (Talking Points Memo. You can see the entire article here.:

A Taxing Situation: Why The GOP Is Advocating A Tax Increase On The Middle Class
By Benjy Sarlin, 10/13/11

You can almost always count on Republican presidential candidates to be united in their opposition to more taxes for the rich. But this time around, the 2012 field is standing lockstep behind a less traditional idea: the middle class pays too little in taxes.

Thanks to a strange convergence of conservative ideological trends since President Obama’s election, Republicans now are expected to protest the entire bottom half of taxpayers’ contributions as too stingy even while they proclaim Americans are “Taxed Enough Already.” And they’ve yet to figure out a policy that will satisfy both complaints at once.

In recent months, nearly every major Republican candidate has name-checked a popular statistic that 47% of Americans who file taxes paid no income tax in 2009. Given the GOP’s anti-tax zeal you’d think they’d be celebrating. Nope!

“Right now we know that 53% of Americans pay income taxes and 47% do not,” Michele Bachmann told Bloomberg TV on Tuesday. “I think we definitely need to change the tax code. We need to get more in line. Everybody benefits from this magnificent country. Everybody pay something.”

Now stop and think. Who are those people who pay no income taxes? The rich or the middle/poor? Right, it’s the middle/poor at whom she is peeved. The rich? Oh, they pay too much.

Not only do statements like Bachmann’s seem to defy past Republican orthodoxy, but the candidates are explicitly making the argument on the same fairness grounds that progressives like Elizabeth Warren have used to demand greater taxes on the rich. The idea isn’t just that tax breaks for the rich trickle down the poor — it’s that they also deserve them more than freeloading Americans. Rick Perry made this moral outrage a key line in his campaign kickoff.

“We’re dismayed at the injustice that nearly half of all Americans don’t even pay any income tax,” Perry said in his announcement speech. “And you know the liberals out there are saying that we need to pay more.”

Now the 47% number only tells part of the story: most of those “non-payers” pay payroll taxes, gas taxes, state and local taxes, etc.

In fact, for the middle/poor, those other taxes usually are their biggest tax bill. FICA, for instance, is a profoundly regressive tax. The same is true of sales taxes.

“It’s Republican class warfare,” former Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett told TPM. “The Democrats say ‘Oh, the millionaires, we need to tax them’ and so they respond in kind.”

Bartlett’s not opposed to the idea of a broader tax code. But the problem is there’s no obvious way to get there without violating other Republican sacred cows on taxes or running into political territory that few politicians dare to tread.

The first issue is that any Republican proposal can’t raise revenue overall — a principle that’s only become more ironclad in the Tea Party era. The obvious solution then is to raise taxes on the middle class but give the money back to the rich and that’s exactly what two of the Republican presidential candidates have proposed. Jon Huntsman would eliminate all tax breaks without exception and use the money to lower income marginal rates — the net effect of which would be a middle class tax hike.

Huntsman’s idea has largely gone unnoticed amid his campaign struggles, but one of his rivals’ proposals is gaining widespread attention this week: Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 plan. Cain solves the non-payer problem by replacing the tax code with 9% income tax, business tax, and new national consumption tax, the combination of which would significantly raise taxes on lower income Americans.

Just when I thought the Republicans had exceeded their allowable limit on nuts, fools and charlatans, with Bachman, Gingrich, Palin, Trump, Paul, Perry, Santorum and Huntsman, they top themselves with Cain. Despite his weird math, taxing poor people 9% on income plus 9% on consumption, and then adding 9% on business, far outweighs any “savings” he dreams up.

(Aside: Like all Republican “stars,” Cain will shoot up in the polls until people actually listen to the nonsense he spouts. Then he will drop, only to be replaced by yet another strange duck. All Romney needs do is smile, shake hands and say nothing, and he will emerge looking like a genius.)

Dean Clancy, Legislative Counsel for Tea Party organizer Freedomworks, who seems like the perfect demographic for Cain’s idea on paper. . . But he’s not on board with Cain, in large part because American voters aren’t ready for that kind of change.
[…]
But if Republicans beyond Cain and Huntsman are unwilling to raise taxes on the bottom half of taxpayers or transition to a consumption tax, their hands are tied. TPM asked both the Romney and Perry campaigns how they’d handle the 47% problem they’ve both derided, but received no response.
[…]
“If the Republicans are suggesting that it’s bad that some people are not paying federal income taxes, can they please clarify that they are in fact proposing a tax increase?” Steve Warmhoff of Citizens for Tax Justice told TPM in an e-mail.

The Tea/Republicans, and to a lesser extent the Democrats, are in a logic trap. They want to reduce the deficit, but that requires taxing somebody more (a Tea/Republican no-no) or spending less. But while “spending less” seems nice in the overall, the devil really is in the details, because Americans want, and should have, Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid and the protections from the military, Homeland Security, FEMA, food & drug inspection etc., etc.,etc. In fact, spending on the biggest budget projects really needs to increase, substantially.

So what’s a debt-hawk to do? The economy needs more federal spending just to recover, let alone to supply real growth and security, and tax increases are out of the question. I suspect that, as usual, when every other bad idea has been tried and found wanting, eventually Congress and the President will be dragged kicking and screaming into the sole good idea, an increase in deficit spending — and (gulp) a big one — as the remaining economic solution.

Cain has done the nation one service, however. Debate about his 9/9/9 plan has exposed the Tea/Republicans as having no viable economic plan whatsoever. They are solidly the “Party of ‘No,’ with nothing to offer but austerity, especially for the lower classes.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com


==========================================================================================================================================
No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth. Monetary Sovereignty: Cutting federal deficits to grow the economy is like applying leeches to cure anemia. The key equation in economics: Federal Deficits – Net Imports = Net Private Savings

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

–Why the economy is failing and will continue to fail

Mitchell’s laws: Reduced money growth never stimulates economic growth. To survive long term, a monetarily non-sovereign government must have a positive balance of payments. Economic austerity causes civil disorder. Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.
==========================================================================================================================================================================

Here is why the economy will have great difficulty recovering from the recession, and more likely will fall into a depression:

Obama Loses Big on Jobs Bill
By Patricia Murphy | The Daily Beast|10/12/11

Nothing quite illustrates the depth of Barack Obama’s weakness in Washington better than the painfully public defeat the Senate handed him Tuesday by blocking his signature American Jobs Act.
[…]
The defeat was . . . a vote of no confidence on . . . his idea that flooding the economy with public money will jump-start the private sector. But even Obama’s fellow Democrats seem to have developed sufficient spending fatigue to put the brakes on new outlays, while the most moderate Democrats say the economy will never recover as long as the deficit continues to spiral out of control.

There you have it: The media’s and the politicians’ puzzling belief that our economy, which is starved for money, will not recover if we feed it. Instead, the idea seems to be we should reduce the debt, i.e. starve the economy, to feed the federal government, which never can starve because it has the unlimited ability to create “food.” It’s madness.

Visualize the poorest among us sending dollars to Warren Buffett, and even that picture doesn’t begin to show the magnitude of the ignorance. Or, no need to visualize. Just look at what happens when deficit spending growth declines: Recession. And what happens when deficit growth increases? Recovery. And which way is the line headed, now?

Deficit reduction causes recessions

The latest Obama plan would have spent $447 billion on infrastructure projects, teacher salaries, and an extension of a payroll tax cut that is set to expire. To pay for it, Senate Democrats last week protected a series of popular tax loopholes in favor of slapping a 5.6 percent surtax on households making more than $1 million a year.

Spending $447 billion is far too little to create a recovery, yet even that inadequate effort is stymied by the myth a Monetarily Sovereign nation – a nation with the unlimited ability to create dollars – needs or even uses tax dollars. The words, “to pay for it” demonstrates total lack of economic understanding. While state taxes pay for state spending and city taxes pay for city spending; federal taxes do not pay for anything.

Sens. Bill Nelson and Jon Tester, two moderate Democrats up for reelection, joined the GOP to block the bill. Tester said he wanted more infrastructure spending and fewer tax breaks in the package. Nelson said the half-trillion-dollar price tag was too rich for his blood.

Meaning, a half-trillion dollars is too much economic recovery for his blood.

“The bottom line is, I don’t believe the potential to create jobs with the Act justifies adding another half trillion to our almost $15 trillion national debt,” said independent Sen. Joe Lieberman.

Congress does not want to increase the meaningless national debt number – an accounting figure that could be eliminated today by the simple expedient of crediting the checking accounts of all T-security holders. Congress prefers austerity for all of us (so long as their own salaries continue.)

Thus do the blind lead the blind into the chasm of despair.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com


==========================================================================================================================================
No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth. Monetary Sovereignty: Cutting federal deficits to grow the economy is like applying leeches to cure anemia. The key equation in economics: Federal Deficits – Net Imports = Net Private Savings

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

–Congratulations. You have become President of the United States. What is your plan?

Mitchell’s laws: Reduced money growth never stimulates economic growth. To survive long term, a monetarily non-sovereign government must have a positive balance of payments. Economic austerity causes civil disorder. Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.
==========================================================================================================================================================================

This is the challenge: You are the President, now. What will you do? The economy has been terrible since 2008 – more that three years and headed nowhere.

In “Nine steps to prosperity; a short message to #Occupy Wall Street,” this blog proposed the following program for recovery:

1. Eliminate FICA (Click here)
2. Medicare — parts A, B & D — for everyone
3. Send every American citizen an annual check for $5,000 or give every state $5,000 per capita (Click here)
4. Long-term nursing care for everyone
5. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
6. Salary for attending school (Click here)
7. Eliminate corporate taxes
8. Increase the standard income tax deduction annually
9. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America

Begin to institute #1-#9 today, in the order shown, and if/when excessive inflation starts to occur, institute the first inflation-fighting program the Fed always uses: Raise interest rates. If that doesn’t do enough, begin to cut deficit spending.

Some readers have argued with the details of the various plans, programs, concepts, beliefs and ideas expressed in the 450 posts and thousands of comments over the past two years. So now I ask all readers to present a plan of their own. That is, if you were President, what would you do?

No fair copping out with caveats about how the President doesn’t have total control and the Tea/Republicans and Democrats won’t let you do this or that or the other thing. Let’s assume you, the President, are a great communicator and can convince the voters to back your ideas, so the vote-hungry Congress will follow along.

What is your plan?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com


==========================================================================================================================================
No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth. Monetary Sovereignty: Cutting federal deficits to grow the economy is like applying leeches to cure anemia. The key equation in economics: Federal Deficits – Net Imports = Net Private Savings

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY